Money / CEO Execs Were Paid $3B to Lay Credit Crisis Foundation Wall Street chieftains were well rewarded for risks they took in 2003-07 By Nick McMaster, Newser Staff Posted Sep 26, 2008 5:45 PM CDT Copied Former Bear Stearns hedge fund manager Ralph Cioffi, exits Brooklyn federal court following a scheduled hearing, Friday, July 18, 2008, in New York. (AP Photo/ Louis Lanzano) More than $3 billion was paid to the chief executives of the five biggest financial firms on Wall Street in the run-up to the credit crisis, Bloomberg reports. While supervising bad mortgage-related credit bets that eventually brought the financial system to its knees, Merrill Lynch’s Stanley O’Neal took in $172 million in 2003-07, while Bear Stearns’ James Cayne took in $161 million. More number-crunching reveals: The $3.1 billion paid to execs was about three times the price JP Morgan paid for Bear Stearns in June. Goldman Sachs was most generous with its top players, paying out $859 million over that span. Henry Paulson was among those benefiting from Goldman largesse, taking in $111 million before becoming Treasury Secretary. Bear Stearns was next at $609 million. With $93 billion in net income, the firms’ average pay per employee was $353,089. (More CEO stories.) Report an error